Pliny and Tacitus Miriam Griffin When we consider how much we have lost of imperial Latin literature and how little ancient material we have for reconstructing the period after the Julio- Claudian Emperors, we can only be profoundly grateful for Pliny and Tacitus, two figures who light up the early second century AD for us. Though we do not have all of what they wrote, what we have is particularly valuable, not only for its intrinsic literary merits, but for what it offers us as historians: namely, two contemporary yet different views of the social and political scene under Nerva and Trajan. In fact, through Pliny’s letters to Tacitus, we can actually see them in­ teracting on that same scene. Personality Contrast Anyone reading a portion of the works of Pliny and Tacitus is immediately struck by a strong contrast of personalities. Asked to find parallels to the im­ pression made by this pair, we might come up with Sherlock Holmes, shrewd and sardonic, as Tacitus, and Dr. Watson, robust and cheerful, as Pliny; or with the pessimistic Eeyore as Tacitus and the optimistic Winnie the Pooh as Pliny, or even with Laurel and Hardy, but none of these pairs would really do justice to the contrast. What are the features that create this impression of contrast? The most obvi­ ous difference is one of style: Pliny’s is abundant, resonant, symmetrical; Taci­ tus’ lean, asymmetrical, abrupt. And the difference in style goes with a difference in tone of voice: Pliny’s cheerful and ingratiating; Tacitus’ grumpy, gloomy and disobliging. One does not have to look hard to find examples that quickly convey this general contrast. So here is Tacitus writing about the relations of senate and Princeps under Tiberius, in the third book of the Annals: So tainted was that age, so mean its sycophancy, that not only the leaders of the state who had to protect their prominent position by servility, but a large proportion of the ex-praetors and ordinary members of the senate would com- This lecture reached its final form as a result of the helpful comments received when it was delivered in January of 1996 at Tel Aviv University. In November of 1996, I had the honour to deliver it as the Kenneth Wellesley Memorial Lecture in Edinburgh. Scripta Classica Israelica vol. XVIII 1999 pp. 139-158 140 PLINY .AND TACITUS pete with each other to express the most shameful and extravagantly flattering sentiments. Tlie tradition runs that Tiberius, on leaving the senate house, would say in Greek, Oh these men, so ready for slavery’. Even he, an enemy to public liberty, became weary of the grovelling endurance of his slaves. (3.65) Here is Pliny in characteristic mode: There is still a sense of loyalty and duty alive in the world, and men whose af­ fection does not die with their friends. Titinius Capito has obtained permis­ sion from the Emperor to set up a statue in the forum to Lucius Silanus. To make use of one’s friendly relations with the Emperor (Nerva) for such a pur­ pose and to test the extent of one’s influence by paying tribute to others is a graceful gesture which deserves nothing but praise ... Capito also celebrates the lives of his greatest heroes in excellent verse, and you may be sure that his love of the virtues of others means he has no lack of them himself. {Ep. 1Ἰ7) — a completely different outlook on life, one feels, not just a contrast between the reign of Tiberius and the reign of Nerva. Then there is the contrast between the openness of Pliny about himself and the reticence of Tacitus. We feel that it is no accident that what we know of Pliny’s life comes mostly from Pliny himself (as the Appendix tabulating their careers shows), and from his own letters, both those he published himself (Books I-IX) and those that some editor probably collected and published after his death as Book X .1 Pliny was a man avid for glory and posthumous repute, as he confesses himself in Ep. 9.3. Of course, he hoped that others would help him secure this immortality. When he responded eagerly to the requests Tacitus made for information about the activities of his uncle and himself during the eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79 (6.16; 6.20), and sent another letter to Tacitus about his own activities under Domitian without even being asked (7.33), Pliny was hop­ ing to get a good write-up in the big historical work on which Tacitus was en­ gaged, namely, the Histories. As he himself writes to Tacitus (7.33Ἰἠ Ί pre­ dict, and I am not deceived by the omens, that your histories will be immortal. Therefore, as I frankly admit, I am all the more eager to appear in them. We are usually careful to see that none but the best artists express our features, so why should we not want our deeds celebrated by a writer like yourself?’ Pliny may This is the standard view, which has, however, been challenged by G. Woolf, ‘Becoming Roman, Staying Greek’, POPS 40 (1995), 122-5; 139 n. 32. Never­ theless, the arguments for it still seem strong: the introductory letter suggests that Pliny is only publishing letters by himself, 1Ἰ0.3 gives Pliny’s dim view of letters written in connection with an official post as literature, ‘plurimas sed inlitteratissimas litteras’; Bk. Χ ends up in the air as far as his governorship goes, but if Pliny lived to complete his term, he would not have published such an unsatisfactorily incomplete record, while, if he died in mid-term, he would probably not have embarked on publication yet. MIRIAM GRIFFIN 141 well have been included in the lost account Tacitus must have given of the erup­ tion of Vesuvius in that work, and he may have had his slot, as he wished, in the lost books about Domitian. At least one of his other friends had written about him, as we learn from Ep. 9.31.2 But these works are lost, and were it not for Pliny’s own letters, all we would have would be a few inscriptions honouring him, those from his home town of Comum, one from Hispellum, and one set up by the people of Vercellae.3 Tacitus, by contrast, is reticent. For reconstructing Tacitus’ life, as the Ap­ pendix shows, we have only his few allusions in his works to his career, an in­ scription about his proconsulship of Asia, an inscription that may record his early career,4 and references in Pliny’s letters. Even in the biography of his fa- ther-in-law Agricola, Tacitus only mentions himself very briefly: he does so to establish his relationship (3.3), to date the marriage of Agricola’s daughter (9.7), and to record his grief at being out of Rome when Agricola died (45.5). In the preface to the Histories which covered the period of the Flavian dynasty, Tacitus briefly mentions his promotion under Vespasian, Titus and Domitian, as part of his promise to write with impartiality: Ί cannot deny that my political career owed its beginning to Vespasian; that Titus advanced it (Tacitus was presumably designated quaestor before Titus died in September of 81), and that Domitian carried it further’.5 Finally, in the Annals (11.11) he mentions himself once, à propos of the calculations used by Domitian in deciding on the year 88 for the celebration of the secular games: ‘As a member of the priesthood of the quin­ decimviri and as praetor at the time, I was involved with this celebration, a fact which I mention not in order to boast (‘quod non iactantia refero’) but because this responsibility has traditionally rested with this priesthood and because the magistrates in particular carried out the duties connected with these ceremonies.’ Because of the minimal and apologetic character of Tacitus’ allusions to him­ self, Pliny actually did more for his immortality than vice versa, for Tacitus’ account of Pliny’s exploits is lost while Pliny speaks of Tacitus in fifteen letters and addresses another eleven to him. When we come to study the relations be­ The friend addressed as Sardus may have been Asconius Sardus of ILS 6692, and the work was perhaps a treatise on oratory (R. Syme, The Dating of Pliny’s Latest Letters’, CQ 35 (1985), 183, n. 60 = Roman Papers 5, 487, n. 60). CIL 5.5262; 5263 (Comum); 11. 5272 (Hispellum); 5.5667 (Fecchio, set up by the Vercellenses). See Appendix I in Α.Ν. Sherwin-White, The Letters of Pliny (Oxford, 1965), 732-3. On CIL 6.10299, see below n. 10. CIL 6Ἰ574 has been identified as a funerary dedication to Tacitus by G. Alföldy, ‘Bricht der Schweigsame sein Schweigen? Ein Grabinschrift aus Rom’, MDAR 102 (1995), 251-67. For the dates, see the Appendix, which follows the analysis of R. Syme, Tacitus (Oxford, 1958), 63-70; 652-3, accepted by Alföldy (previous note), 263-6, whose identification of the funerary dedication would clarify Titus’ beneficium as the selection of Tacitus to be quaestor Augusti. 142 PLINY AND TACITUS tween the two senatorial authors, however, we find that there is not only the contrast we feel as readers, but an element of rivalry, attested at least on one side, Pliny’s of course. Rivalry Pliny’s concern for his own reputation inevitably led him to see Tacitus, like many others of his contemporaries, as a rival. Two other examples will illustrate the habit.
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